Sending out a stern message against the destruction of public property and transport system during agitations, the Supreme Court on Monday said State governments would have to pay for the loss incurred by Railways and general public on disruption of rail services.

A bench of Mr Justice G.S. Singhvi and Mr Justice A.K. Ganguly indicated that it would frame guidelines for fixing responsibility for all such losses on the State governments for failure to maintain law and order in their respective State.

“Destruction of public property and disrupting train services cannot be allowed in the name of agitation. The political parties behind such agitation must be derecognised and people must be sent behind bars for such acts. Such activities are not acceptable and it promotes lawlessness,” the bench said.

Query to Haryana

The bench asked the Haryana Government to respond why it should not pay the loss incurred by the Railways following the 11-day stir organised by 12 ‘khap' panchayats against booking of some upper caste people in connection with the Mirchpur Dalit killings case.

“You must make some payment to Railways for its loss. You pay the money according to your own estimates,” the bench said after the Centre pointed out that the Railways suffered a loss of Rs 33.95 crore during the agitations.

The bench asked all the parties to suggest on what guidelines to be framed to fix the responsibility for damages done to the public property during agitation.

During the last hearing, the State government had informed the court that loss of Rs 45.92 lakh was caused to the transport department because of the agitation and Rs 90,000 was spent by the forest department in removing 3,130 trees which were uprooted by the protesters.

Villagers had been protesting the booking of 98 members of their community in the case relating to the killing of 70-year-old Tara Chand and his physically challenged daughter Suman at Mirchpur village in Hisar on April 21 last year.

Demanding a fresh probe into the Dalit killings, upper caste people of Mirchpur and other adjoining villages in Hisar district had brought the rail and road traffic to Delhi via Jind to a grinding halt earlier this month.

Members of the pre-dominant Jat community squatted on the railway tracks at Julani village near Jind railway station in December last year, disrupting railway traffic on the Jind-Jakhal section of the Delhi-Ferozepur route.

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